The cheese grater is dead.
Apple pulled the iconic Mac Pro from its
official website, and with that removal comes the confirmation everyone saw coming — the product is discontinued, full stop. No more purchases through Apple's online store, no more new units sitting in retail channels.
It's been out of stock everywhere for about a month. The website removal just made it official.
Key Points
- Apple removed the 'cheese grater' Mac Pro from its website, confirming the product is officially discontinued
- The Mac Pro had been out of stock across retail and online channels for approximately a month before removal
- Pro Display XDR is also discontinued simultaneously — Apple's high-end professional monitor is no longer in production
- Studio Display replaces the Pro Display XDR as Apple's current monitor offering
- No next-generation Mac Pro has been announced to replace the discontinued model
The Signs Were There for a Month
Retail shelves running dry on a product that Apple hasn't restocked is the oldest discontinuation signal in the book. When it's happening simultaneously across physical stores and online channels, it's not a supply issue — it's an exit strategy. Apple has been quietly winding down Mac Pro inventory for weeks, and the website removal confirms what informed buyers already suspected.
Anyone holding out for a sale or a last-chance purchase is now out of options through official channels.
Pro Display XDR Going With It Is a Bigger Deal Than It Sounds
The Mac Pro discontinuation was expected. The Pro Display XDR going simultaneously is the more significant loss for professional users. That 6K reference-grade monitor was genuinely best-in-class for color-critical work — video production, photography, animation. The Studio Display replacing it is a capable product, but it operates in a different tier. Forty-nine hundred dollars versus sixteen hundred dollars tells you the gap in positioning.
Professionals who relied on the XDR for calibrated color work now have fewer Apple options at that standard.
What Comes Next Is the Real Question
Apple hasn't announced a Mac Pro successor. That gap in the lineup is conspicuous — the Mac Pro served a specific customer that the Mac Studio, however capable, doesn't fully replace. Heavy compute workloads requiring maximum RAM, expansion slots, and sustained professional performance over hours of rendering or simulation need something the Studio simply isn't designed for.
Whether Apple is building something new for that user or quietly deciding that customer belongs to someone else's ecosystem — that's the question the cheese grater's exit leaves unanswered.